untonuggan: text: "If only yarn grew on trees" with a photo of trees that have been yarn bombed (covered with knitted yarn) (yarn trees)
The Smithsonian Renwick Gallery is going to opening an exhibit entitled 40 Under 40: Crafting the Future on Friday. There will also be a meet-the-artist session from 12-2:30. The exhibit runs from Friday until February 3, 2013 and then goes on tour.

From the exhibit website:

"40 under 40: Craft Futures
features forty artists born since 1972, the year the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s contemporary craft and decorative arts program was established at its branch museum, the Renwick Gallery. The exhibition investigates evolving notions of craft within traditional media such as ceramics and metalwork, as well as in fields as varied as sculpture, industrial design, installation art, fashion design, sustainable manufacturing, and mathematics. The range of disciplines represented illustrates new avenues for the handmade in contemporary culture.

All of the artworks selected for display in the exhibition were created since Sept. 11, 2001. This new work reflects the changed world that exists today, which poses new challenges and considerations for artists. These 40 artists are united by philosophies for living differently in modern society with an emphasis on sustainability, a return to valuing the hand-made and what it means to live in a state of persistent conflict and unease."

It looks pretty awesome: check out the slide show with yarn bombing, embroidery (by Jenny Hart, even), wood carving, and lots of other stuff here. (Good even if you can't make it to DC, they have a lot of images)

cross-posted to [community profile] dcmetro 

untonuggan: Patrick Stewart in Star Trek attire with the caption "Engage" (Engage)

100things

I enjoyed making a Washington, DC/Smithsonian-related post, so here's another one. Many people know about the Hope Diamond, housed in the Smithsonian Natural History Museum. However, there is another diamond - or rather, many very small diamonds - that I find infinitely more interesting. It's just around the corner, and hardly anyone seems to notice it.

The diamonds are in a little glass tube at the entrance to the Meteorite exhibit, or rather the end of the Gems and Minerals Hall. They're not very imposing at all, and you have to use a microscope to see them. Why are they so exciting, you may wonder? Well, they may be one of the oldest things in our solar system.

Most of the "old" things in our solar system were formed around the birth of our sun, about 4.5 billion years ago. However, these lovely little specks of diamonds were formed - at least, scientists are pretty sure that they were - during the supernova of another star. It's been awhile since I've paid homage to them (for they're another thing I visit when I go to the Smithsonian, and sadly, they don't merit their own web page for me to look it up), but consider this: these little bits of diamond dust were once - something - in another solar system. Maybe even another life form (although don't quote me on that, as there is no evidence to back up that particular guess. But at least some form of matter.) The sun went supernova and in that flash, they became diamonds. They survived through space and time to arrive here, on Earth, where eventually someone picked up the meteorite that they were part of and thought, "Huh, this looks worth investigating." And then they figured out what they probably were.

Pretty frelling awesome.

Here's an article about diamonds that hail from outside our planet, if you're interested in reading more. It's not specifically aimed at the ones at the museum, but that's as good as I can get to a direct link.
untonuggan: Lily and Chance squished in a cat pile-up on top of a cat tree (buff tabby, black cat with red collar) (Default)
100things

My favorite museum in the Smithsonian - indeed, in all of Washington, DC - is definitely the National Museum of the American Indian. I love that the outside of the beautiful natural landscape of the outside of the museum is part of the museum's exhibit, which demonstrates Native American tribes' connection to the natural landscape. I've seen baby ducklings swimming in the pond, heard a red-winged blackbird, watched dragonflies skate across a lily pond - and all within sight of the Capital building and the Washington Monument. The architecture of the Museum itself also suggests adobe buildings. There is also a garden along one side of the museum that uses the "three sisters" method to grow corn, squash, and beans, as well as tobacco and other crops. It's really cool. And that's just the outside.

I could go on and on about the exhibits, which make a point of (1) not showing artifacts plundered from the grave sites of Native American peoples; (2) showing Native American peoples as living and evolving peoples rather than somehow "trapped in time"; (3) showing beautiful depictions of Native American craftsmanship; (4) showing more than just the European angle. My favorite exhibit is probably the one on spirituality, which shows similarities and differences between the spiritual beliefs of a number of Native American tribes throughout North and South America. It's interactive, there's videos, it's very cool.

The cafeteria is also worth a visit, as there is a selection of delicious food that's representative of different regions of the Americas. You can get (depending on the season) tamales, salmon, bison burgers, squash and crab apple soup, various kinds of salads, yucca, yams...it's delish. I go here sometimes just for the outside of the museum and food. (It is a little pricey, but given what you're eating it's comparable to a nice restaurant. But definitely not as cheap as the McDonald's at the Air and Space Museum.)

My favorite part of the museum, though, is this statue by Apache artist Allan Houser. It's entitled Sacred Rain Arrow, and it depicts a young man shooting an arrow into the sky as a prayer for rain for his people. To me, it is the essence of prayer. (This photo depicts the statue from before it was housed at the museum, because I was trying to find a public domain image.) Please note that sometimes the statue goes on tour, etc. or they stick it in a weird part of the museum so sometimes you have to ask the info desk about where he might be.

Sacred Rain Arrow by Allan Houser

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untonuggan: Lily and Chance squished in a cat pile-up on top of a cat tree (buff tabby, black cat with red collar) (Default)
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